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painting by Wilhelm von Schadow's The Artist’s Children, Max Stern v Dusseldorf [52] In 2023 the city of Düsseldorf agreed on a settlement with the heirs of Max Stern. [53] drawing 'Felsige Waldlandschaft mit weitem Ausblick' by Isaak Major Arthur Feldmann [54] [55] Kunsthalle Bremen [56]
It was restituted to the heirs of Max Stern in 2009. [29] [30] In 2009 New York art dealer Richard Feigen restituted, to the heirs of Max Stern, an Italian baroque painting of St. Jerome in the Wilderness, attributed to Ludovico Carracci (1555-1619), that he had acquired at Lempertz. “I was surprised that Lempertz had been the auctioneer in ...
Stolpersteine is the German name for stumbling blocks collocated all over Europe by German artist Gunter Demnig. They remember the fate of the victims of Nazi Germany being murdered, deported, exiled or driven to suicide. Generally, the stumbling blocks are posed in front of the building where the victims had their last self chosen residence.
Louis William Stern (born Ludwig Wilhelm Stern; April 29, 1871 – March 27, 1938) was a German American psychologist and philosopher who originated personalistic psychology, which placed emphasis on the individual by examining measurable personality traits as well as the interaction of those traits within each person to create the self.
William Stern (psychologist) (1871–1938), German psychologist and philosopher; William Stern, father of American surrogate child Baby M; William Joseph Stern (1891–1965), physicist and jet engine developer; William M. Stern, rabbi at Temple Sinai in Oakland, California; Bill Stern (1907–1971), American actor and sportscaster
Wilhelm Scholkmann; Wilhelm Schreuer; Adolf Schrödter; Emil Gottlieb Schuback; Raffael Schuster-Woldan; Johann Wilhelm Schütze; Theodor Schüz; Peter Schwingen; Hermann Seeger; Carl Maria Seyppel; Wilhelm Simmler; Richard Sohn; Wilhelm Sohn; Max Stern (artist) Franz Streitt
He began forging paintings by Hitler and an increasing number of notes, poems and letters, until he produced his first diary in the mid-to-late 1970s. The West German journalist with Stern who "discovered" the diaries and was involved in their purchase was Gerd Heidemann , who had an obsession with the Nazis.
It later went through Munich's Galerie Caspari, established by Georg Caspari in late 1913, before ultimately entering the possession of art collector Karl Wilhelm Zitzmann in Erlangen and from there to the collection of the art dealer Julius Stern in Düsseldorf. The last private owner of the painting was the family of the print shop owner and ...